Every time I speak of Lunna, my
shtetl - I say zichronoh l'vracha. For me, she died. I don't hear
from her anymore…can't see her - an iron certain hides her from me.
Strangers took our homes, our gardens, our stores and all else. The
murderers were there in the homes of their victim. I can't travel
there to see the graves of my ancestors, relatives and friends.
The shtetl is dead for me, but memories live on me and are precious
to me.
There, was a crib of my whole family and there I spent my years of
youth.
The name Chaim Sorin you won't know but if I tell you that I am
Chaim Avrohom Herschele [which is his father's name] from Grodno
Street, all of you people from Lunna and Volla…you'll know who I am.
Our house was opposite to Moti Chezkele's house. (see
note 1) Our street went from the
marketplace and at the end of the street, the street split: on the
right Flisadis Street from the yard, in the middle is Tsigelnis
Street, and on the left you went to Grodno.
From the large market square that's four cornered with a church in
the middle and stores all around, there was a street: Zorrene [Zagoryany]
Street (southward) then Putstove Street Northward toward the Niemen
River.
The long street, Shulhof Street, stretched from the South to the
Goishe Street. This street joined the two villages of Lunna and
Volla.
I am now close to seventy years old, and I spent time in this
village till my Bar-Mitzvah. Then for short times between semesters
(bain Hazmanim) the last I was in town was 1907 for the draft.
During this time I have traveled through many countries: Germany,
France, Portugal, Belgium, and in 1940 I ran away from the German
cannibals to New York. Despite so many years and so many
experiences, the picture of this village of ours is very clear in my
memory. I know everyone there by their names and nicknames and our
fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters and good friends Zichronam
L'vracha.
The people of Lunna were called "Satin Backpacks". Why? They were
poor (except a few rich ones), but they were fine people. They had
good teachers for Gemarah and Chumash and Siddur – then they had
teachers like Kalman, Herschel, Schmerl for Hebrew and Russian and
Math. Every father, no matter how poor he was, paid tuition, bought
Seforim and books for their children.
My father, zichrono l'vracah was poor and had a lot of children and
made the greatest effort that all the children should learn well.
This is the spirit of the shtetl.
Two of us paid back the shtetl with interest. In 1907, I helped to
establish the modern Cheder (Ceder Metukan) in Lunna together with
Shishatsky and Mattis (see note 2).
In 1917, my brother, Shmuel helped to start the Yaakov Klotshkovsky
z'l Yiddish school with emphasis on secular and Yiddish culture.
There was no such thing that someone can't read or write in Lunna.
In every Cheder people leaned regardless of which school or
subgroup. In the "old wall" section of town, they learned. Jews
(artisans, tailors, etc.) were scholars that could give a shiur
(lesson) in Moshnayos, Shas or Shulchan Oruch. I'll mention a few:
Leishike the painter, Yehoshua the baker, Moshe the baker, Moshe the
miller, Herschel the flour maker, and more and more and more…
The younger people in Lunna were active with great enthusiasm in the
freedom movements: Zionism, Socialism, Bundism.
Do you remember the "Belzer" (Diamond bourse) in Grodno Street?
Shabbos in the evening in the first years of this 20th century?
I want to remember more people: Leon Arkin, Moti Chaim Shoskes,
Michel Schnier, Shlomike, son of Moshe the shoemaker, Belke, son of
Noach the Furrier, Mereh, Avrohom Itsis' son.
Whenever you find Lunna Jews, they are Oskim B'tzochai Tzibur (busy
with the needs of the community) and trained to be friends with Jews
and general culture. The Lunna people from the "Belze" meeting place
in Grodno Street fought in New York to establish unions here:
Leon Arkin was President of all workers schools in the United
States.
Goldin became a Rabbi in Rochester.
Chaim Sorin (that's me!) was the founder of the Jewish School in
Portugal.
People from Lunna filled fine positions: doctors, lawyers,
engineers. I am sure that in our Memorial Book of Lunna Volla, you
will find many professionals. I am one of the people from Lunna who
had the "yichus" to bring many Jews from Lunna to Portugal after
World War I, as soon as the Polish started showing their "robbing
faces" to the Jews.
I was one who started the Diamond Industry in Israel and thereby,
many more Lunna Jews are effective there in Israel.
Lunna Volla is no more – the murderers killed 2000 people and only
ten remained alive, but there are many who left before and they
carry with love and respect in their hearts, their memory of Lunna
Volla, the martyrs from our town Lunna Volla, Zichronam L'vracha.
Notes
Note 1: Moti's Chezkel is Mordechai son
of Israel Kosowski. >back
Note 2: Feivel Mattis (b. ca. 1885 in a
village, now in Ukraine), was a Hebrew teacher and a reporter in the
Hebrew newspaper "Ha'Mashkif" (The Observer). He came to Lunna,
married Henie nee Kosowski, daughter of Moti Chezkel. Their family
lives in Israel. It is conjectured that the first name of Shishatzky
was Hyman (Chaim) and that he was born in Lunna in 1887.
>back
Moshe Alperstein, whose paternal
grandfather Simon Alperstein and maternal grandfather Mordechai
Kosowski had lived in Lunna, recalls:
Avraham-Hirsh Sorin (Chaim Sorin's father), born around 1860, was a
butcher in Lunna, and resided with his family in Grodno (Grodzienska)
Street. Moshe Alperstein did not know Avraham-Hirsh but he knew his
son Chaim Sorin.
In 1939 before the outbreak of WW2, Alperstein was a student at the
university in Brussels, Belgium. When the war began, he could not
get anymore financial support from his parents who remained in
Poland. Alperstein's aunt - Henie (Kosowski) Mattis, who was born
in 1887 and grew up in Lunna, was a good friend of Chaim Sorin
during their youth days in Lunna. In 1940 Henie was living with her
family in Israel. She wrote a letter to her old friend, Chaim Sorin,
asking him to help her nephew. One day Alperstein received an
invitation to come to Chaim Sorin's office in Antwerp and Mr. Sorin gave
Mr. Alperstein ten pounds. In 1950 Chaim Sorin visited in Israel and Moshe
Alperstein repaid him what he owed.
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Compiled by
Ruth Marcus & Aliza Yonovsky Created
May 2007
Updated by rLb, March 2020
Copyright © 2007 Ruth Marcus
All the photos are presented
by courtesy of the families and are not allowed to be reproduced
without their permission. |
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